Screens // Center Channel Best Practice
Make sure all three channels across the front are identical no matter what. Not simply from the same manufacturer or series, but identical model numbers. This is the most critical speaker in your room. Here we'll collect the various sound advice from audio/video publications relevant to the center channel. In a world of no guarantees, you can always count on these facts:
Home Theater
"Set up the speakers so that their drivers are aligned vertically. This
will provide the smoothest off-axis response. Horizontal center speakers are an
exception, but this arrangement can compromise the performance. The horizontal driver
configuration in most center speakers is driven by aesthetic and marketing
considerations, not the best sonic performance."
Speakers: Where Do I Put Them?, Darryl Wilkinson, Feb 2010
"Horizontal dedicated centers are a throwback to the days when bulky TVs
ruled the roost. Their persistence in the market is rooted in the popular
misconception that only a horizontal speaker can serve in the center position. The people who design and market them know better. Dedicated centers
usually have a left-to-right woofer-tweeter-woofer driver array that's prone to
horizontal lobing. Lobing is the result of closely spaced drivers'
propensity to sum and cancel each other, which causes uneven response from seat
to seat around the room. Better center speakers mitigate the problem with
a vertically stacked midrange and tweeter or different crossover points for the
individual woofers. When a woofer-tweeter-woofer speaker operates
vertically, what had been undesirable lobing can be seen as a possibly desirable
limiting of vertical dispersion, which can reduce ceiling and floor reflections. The best center speakers duplicate the sonic characteristics of your front left
and right speakers. An exact duplicate, placed with the same orientation,
works especially well."
Loudspeakers Buyer's Guide, Don't
Underinvest in Your Surround System, Mark Fleischmann, Feb 2010
Audioholics
"In every case where we measured a center channel speaker with redundant horizontal
drivers we were able to improve the smoothness of its horizontal frequency response in that range
by reorienting the speaker vertically."
"To get the most cohesive performance out of perhaps the most important channel in your home theater,
strive for getting a center channel that is identical to your mains."
Vertical vs Horizontal Center Speaker Designs, Chris Seymour,
Audioholics, December 2009
"Indeed, a horizontal in-wall center speaker is a monument to ignorance." "While it's true that dual horizontal
midrange drivers covering the same frequency range will overlap and 'picket-fence' with
each other at some angle off-axis, what is also true is that in the crossover region,
where the midrange driver is crossing over to the tweeter, their output also overlaps
and causes interference in the horizontal plane. So it's not just the dual 5-inchers, it's
also where the 5 inch crosses over and overlaps with the tweeter. Even if
it were a single 5 inch mid crossing over to a 1 inch tweeter, if they were mounted side-by-side, there
would be a lot of crossover-region interference in the horizontal plane."
Note on the drawing. Yes Cletus, drivers radiate in all directions, but your
seating is arranged horizontally. This illustration shows the wave interference
across the horizontal plane and how to fix it by simple rotation. In
addition to the crossover zone illustrated, wave interference will occur between
the woofers depending on their spacing and high frequency limitations.
Center
Channel Speaker Design Additional Considerations, Steve Feinstein, Audioholics,
April 2012
"Probably the biggest compromise in speaker type and placement in a home theater is often unavoidable. I am speaking of the dreaded
“horizontal center channel speaker.” Nearly all horizontal centers, even the better ones, have the wrong dispersion pattern. When the
drivers are horizontally configured, the speaker tends to have narrow horizontal dispersion and broad vertical dispersion; the opposite
of what is ideal."
Optimizing Front LCR Speaker Placment, Paul Scarpelli, Audioholics, July
2015
Widescreen Review
Widescreen Review editor Gary Reber: "How should the center channel loudspeaker be implemented?"
BG Radia Loudspeaker principle designer Igor Levitsky:
"Horizontally positioned center channel with two midwoofers flanking a tweeter
is a compromise and should be avoided if possible for serious home theatre
systems. If one has no choice but to use a horizontally positioned center
channel, then use loudspeakers with vertically or coaxially positioned tweeter
and midrange drivers. The ideal setup, though, is to use a center channel
loudspeaker that is identical to the left and right loudspeakers and positioned
behind the screen."
Widescreen Review, June/July 2013
Height-Ranked Center Channel Options
As height is typically the limiting factor, here are some height-ranked options that all have smooth, quality horizontal response without lobing or comb filtering, all under a foot tall when set on its shortest side. Our choice would be the JTR Single 8HT.
3.94",
Tannoy HTX101 XP Not currently available in North America, but
the rest of the world can be saved from horizontally redundant drivers.
5.98",
Tannoy Revolution XT Mini
7.09",
KEF Q150
7.09",
KEF R100
7.50",
Omega
Loudspeakers Super 3i While listed as pairs, I bet they'd make
you a third.
7.87",
KEF LS50 A Stereophile review is
here.
8.27",
KEF Q350
8.27",
Tannoy Autograph Mini
8.67",
Technics
SB-C700 You'd need to attach rubber feet on its side as it's
curved. A Stereophile review is
here.
8.70",
Tannoy Revolution XT 6 Awkward to lay on its side due to its
silly base.
9.00",
Omega Loudspeakers Super 7 Monitor Mk2
9.75",
JTR Single
8HT These excellent-sounding, US-made speakers are an easy
recommendation. Their subs are incredible. This would be our
pick from this list.
9.84",
Tannoy DC6i
10.5",
Hsu
Research CCB-8
10.7",
Tannoy DC8 This design does not lend itself to easily placing
on its side, but it's still a horizontally-responsible center channel
option.
11.5",
Seaton Sound Spark XC
Without the Spark's dual radiators, this purely-coaxial is orientation
independent.
11.0",
Omega Loudspeakers Super Alnico Monitor
11.6",
Tannoy DC8i With a more easily rotated box, although taller
If you have more available height than this, then the entire world of bookshelf or even tower speakers open up to you. Get three, even if you have to toss an extra in the closet. It's what George Lucas and Abbey Road Studios did.
Honorable mentions. Pioneer-owned TAD speakers have a great sounding coaxial mid-high driver, but lack any short options. You could lay their (or any) bookshelf on the side, but there will be horizontal wave interference in the crossover overlap zone. Not ideal, but at least it keeps the mids and highs from being horizontally arranged. Thiel used to have a great coaxial driver but after Jim's passing they no longer have any short options.
Finally, there are many options with the midrange and tweeter vertically oriented. This is better, but there will still be (less audible) wave interference in the woofer to midrange crossover zone and at least harmonically within the horizontal woofers. Pushing this redundancy as far down the frequency spectrum helps, as wave interference ideally doesn't occur within the 1/2 wavelength that's being reproduced. For example, at 1kHz the 1/2 wavelength is 6.7". That's not much space to fit anything horizontal, so having horizontal redundancy that high in frequency will result in poor off-axis response. The 1/2 wavelength of 400Hz is 16.7", enabling the speaker designer to design the crossover and more space to duplicate horizontal woofers with less audible effect. Here is a pretty good lecture on how wave interference occurs. If you can't respect acoustics at least to this degree, then you may be Shawn Byrne, the semi-literate conciliatory admin in a feral Facebook group.¹
Blu-ray Forum
Here is for the most part a summarization of our previous Audioholics article, but the member "Big Daddy" has filled out some of the perspectives more, and of course who wouldn't be fascinated by another 27 pages of forum discussion? Center Channel Speakers, Big Daddy, Blu-ray Forum, March 2009
Blu-ray Forum¹"Some companies do better than others. That's it. There's no right or wrong. There's just is."